Publication | Closed Access
Direct Growth of Metal Sulfide Nanoparticle Networks in Solid‐State Polymer Films for Hybrid Inorganic–Organic Solar Cells
132
Citations
30
References
2011
Year
EngineeringOrganic Solar CellPhoto-electrochemical CellPhotovoltaic DevicesPlasmon-enhanced PhotovoltaicsChemistryPhotovoltaicsSemiconductorsSolar Cell StructuresAnnealing TemperatureDirect GrowthHybrid MaterialsMaterials ScienceIn-situ Thermal DecompositionElectrical EngineeringSolar PowerNanotechnologyAm1.5 Solar IlluminationSemiconducting PolymerNanomaterialsOrganic-inorganic Hybrid MaterialBuilding-integrated PhotovoltaicsThin FilmsSolar CellsSolid‐state Polymer FilmsSolar Cell Materials
Hybrid metal sulfide/polymer solar cell active layers are fabricated employing an approach based upon the in-situ thermal decomposition of a single source metal xanthate precursor in a semiconducting polymer film. The nanomorphology of the film, the charge photogeneration yield at the donor-acceptor heterojunction and device performance are shown to be dependent upon the annealing temperature. Photovoltaic devices based upon such layers are shown to exhibit power conversion efficiencies of ∼2.2% under AM1.5 solar illumination thus demonstrating the potential of such nanocomposite films for photovoltaic device applications.
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